- 5 Posts
- 21 Comments
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•We Suck at Promoting Climate Action, Here is How We Change ThatEnglish
2·3 years agoIt seems to me that the unfortunate reality is that hitting people with facts has either already succeeded (that’s most of us reading this thread I would guess), or it will cause eyes to glaze over, and the cognitive dissonance to kick in to high gear; so we do need to do something different to persuade the rest to do something useful.
But, simply “making friends and telling stories” (to trivialise the article) is useless, there are very many resources on ‘nonnormative non-violent’ action and at least one study that confirm that it is statistically effective (dense scientific paper). Here’s some resources:
- Nonviolent Direct Action and the Struggle for Climate Justice: A Perspective from 350 Seattle
- Foreign Policy News Nonviolent action: Why and how it works
- Organising Stories and Lessons from the 350 Organising Story Telling Lab
- International Center on Nonviolent Conflict 198 Methods of Nonviolent Action
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
DIY@slrpnk.net•Step-by-step instructions to build a smartphone that is open-source, upgradeable, repairable, and Big Tech free
6·3 years agoWhy the down votes on this? I had a quick look at the github repo and it looks pretty neat to me. I must be missing something…
Anyone care to enlighten me?
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•Scientists invent double-sided solar panel that generates vastly more electricityEnglish
2·3 years agoFair enough, good point.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•Scientists invent double-sided solar panel that generates vastly more electricityEnglish
3·3 years agoWe have bifacial panels, cost was comparable, and rated at ~15% additional output. Now almost 2yrs old.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
science@lemmy.world•MIT: How to pull carbon dioxide out of seawaterEnglish
1·3 years ago“The carbon dioxide problem is the defining problem of our life, of our existence,” Varanasi says. “So clearly, we need all the help we can get.”
Indeed.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
World News@lemmy.ml•PepsiCo, Mars See Business Boom in Russia After Staying BehindEnglish
21·3 years agoAll $hit highly processed “foods” anyway. Better off without them.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
World News@lemmy.ml•Robert Jenrick has cartoon murals painted over at children’s asylum centre
2·3 years agoJust this:
echo 'Suella Braverman' | sed s/S/Cr/Why I left there decades ago and have never gone back.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
SpaceX@sh.itjust.works•SpaceX to push the envelope with record-breaking 16th flight for a Falcon 9 boosterEnglish
1·3 years agoI remember bring so hopeful when they first landed it, and were getting it back to port. Remember Elon saying something like ‘it feels like the dog that caught the bus’. Seems so long ago now!
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
Books@lemmy.ml•What are you reading this week? [July 3-July 9, 2023]
2·3 years agoI just finished The Deluge by Stephen Markley (all 900pp!)
It’s basically a US-centric “narrative” of the 2030’s, told from the PoV of about a dozen different characters, with the thread of climate change prominent throughout.
Really it’s hard to describe it as good or bad, an enjoyable read etc. It is certainly well written, and characterisation is exceptionally good and detailed, but for me it was by turns scary, amusing, depressing, profoundly sad and wrenching in its humanity. I have no reason to doubt its accuracy based on the science.
It took me almost a month to read because I had to take breaks to get my “cognitive dissonance” recharged.
I would definitely recommend it.
It would make a good streaming series on Amazon Prime or Apple TV.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
Books@lemmy.ml•ChatGPT prompt of a markdown-compatible list of sci-fi books
1·3 years agoGood!
People run around with their hair on fire about the quality of LLMs and fake this and that, and take over the world etc, but IME ChatGPT is actually quite useful if you treat it like a search engine on steroids, and treat the “search” results with the same intelligent filtering.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
SpaceX@sh.itjust.works•In-space manufacturing startup aces pharma experiment in orbitEnglish
2·3 years agoThanks, fair enough.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
SpaceX@sh.itjust.works•In-space manufacturing startup aces pharma experiment in orbitEnglish
4·3 years agoThat’s great, but one part I don’t understand is the compelling advantage of growing drug crystals (from the article) in micro-g. I get that maybe they are larger & maybe fewer defects (?) but why is that important for this application?
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
31·3 years agoFair enough, I couldn’t disagree at all.
Would be wonderful to sneak a peak at a historical analysis from ++50yrs: either it’s Putin’s masterstroke, or he’s struggling to tamp down prima donna Prigohzin with his buddy Lukashenko’s help. Occam’s razor would certainly point to the latter.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
21·3 years agoThat’s exactly right. I imagine Putin & his lackeys are very busy indeed right now. Just I would definitely not count him out like many articles seem to be.
Edit: spelling
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
31·3 years agoYeah you may be right, I even hope you’re right. But I don’t think Putin cares about saving face in the west.
I would guess his biggest challenge would be keeping the Belorussian people in line. I know little about the country, I should probably read up!
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
43·3 years agoGood point, but Putin plays the long game, I suspect this is strategic manoeuvring for 12-18 months from now.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
83·3 years agoHa, I’d rather take odds on Lukashenko “falling from a window” - I seem to remember he was reported as “seriously ill” a few weeks ago, plus if I remember Putin was pressuring him to attack Ukraine, and he refused.
Get rid of L. and Putin can install Prigo. and they will work together on Ukraine. Scary.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksOPto
World News@lemmy.ml•Belarusian leader confirms arrival of exiled Wagner chief Yevgeny PrigozhinEnglish
105·3 years agoTo comment on my own link, I still think (per comments elsewhere), that right from the get-go this is a 3-way play orchestrated by Putin to get a strong fight-ready leader on his western flank, and north of Ukraine.
I do not think it has much at all to do with a coup or exile.
cxtinac@sh.itjust.worksto
World News@lemmy.ml•Opinion | Yesterday’s Putin Is GoneEnglish
62·3 years agoI posted this comment in another thread (hope it’s OK to link). TL;DR Putin has a track record of using bizarre public “emergencies”* to progress what he wants, maybe this is another one.
*e.g. Moscow theatre gassing, Beslan school massacre






Well said!